History:
St. Pius X was born
June2, 1835 in Venice. His parents were Giovanni Battista Sarto and Margarita
(née Sanson); the former, a postman, died in 1852, but Margarita lived
to see her son a cardinal. He was ordained in 1858, and for nine years was
chaplain at Tombolo, having to assume most of the functions of parish priest,
as the pastor was old and an invalid. He sought to prefect his knowledge of
theology by assiduously studying Saint Thomas and canon law; at the same time
he established a night school for adult students, and devoted himself of the
ministry of preaching in other towns to which he was called. Became Pope in
1903.
In his first
Encyclical, wishing to develop his program to some extent, he said that the
motto of his pontificate would be "instaurare omnia in Christo"[Restore
all things to Christ] from Ephesians 1:10).
He encouraged daily Holy Communion and that the first Communion of children
should not be deferred too long after they had reached the age of discretion.
It was by his desire that the Eucharistic Congress of 1905 was held at Rome,
while he enhanced the solemnity of subsequent Eucharistic congresses by
sending to them cardinal legates.
He was a promoter of sacred music; as pope, he published, November 22, 1903, a
Motu Proprio on sacred music in churches, and at the same time ordered the
authentic Gregorian Chant to be used everywhere, while he caused the choir
books to be printed with the Vatican font of type under the supervision of a
special commission. In the Encyclical "Acerbo nimis" (April 15, 1905)
he treated of the necessity of catechismal instruction, not only for children,
but also for adults, giving detailed rules, especially in relation to suitable
schools for the religious instruction of students of the public schools, and
even of the universities. He caused a new catechism to be published for the
Diocese of Rome.
As bishop, his chief
care had been for the formation of the clergy, and in harmony with this
purpose, an Encyclical to the Italian episcopate (July 28, 1906) enjoined the
greatest caution in the ordination of priests, calling the attention of the
bishops to the fact that there was frequently manifested among the younger
clergy a spirit of independence that was a menace to ecclesiastical
discipline.
The pope has at heart
above all things the purity of the faith. On various occasions, as in the
Encyclical regarding the centenary of Saint Gregory the Great, Pius X had
pointed out the dangers of certain new theological methods, which, based upon
Agnosticism and upon Immanentism, necessarily divest the doctrine of the faith
of its teachings of objective, absolute, and immutable truth, and all the
more, when those methods are associated with subversive criticism of the Holy
Scriptures and of the origins of Christianity. Wherefore, in 1907, he caused
the publication of the Decree "Lamentabili" (called also the Syllabus of Pius
X), in which sixty-five propositions are condemned. The greater number of
these propositions concern the Holy Scriptures, their inspiration, and the
doctrine of Jesus and of the Apostles, while others relate to dogma, the
sacraments, and the primacy of the Bishop of Rome. Soon after that, on
September 8 , 1907, there appeared the famous Encyclical "Pascendi",
which expounds and condemns the system of Modernism.
He died in 1914. He was canonized in 1954 by Pius XII.
(Principal
source - Catholic Encyclopedia - 1913 edition )